[The following data were published in "The Archer
Quarterly" publication of The Archer Association, PO Box
6233, McLean, VA 22106, edited by George W. Archer, (Simon, Stephen,
Stephen, Nathan, James I). The Archer Quarterly was published
from the Fall of 1982 to the Summer of 1992. It is no longer
published.

The material below was taken from disk files used to publish "The
Archer Quarterly." The comments in parenthesis ( ),
such as Editor's note, were in the original publication. The
material in square brackets [GWA comment:] was added in June
2000 to update or clarify this material drawing on files I have
developed since 1974 based on material submitted by Patrick's
descendants, published and archival sources. Time did not permit
recopying all the data from hard copy. Instead this material is
submitted in hopes that Patrick's descendants will share information
to supplement and correct what has been published here to support my
on-going project to published "The Descendants of Patrick
Archer." This is a multi-generational genealogy beginning
with Patrick and following his descendants down to the present
generation. Presently I have material on eleven generations. If you
want more on anything you find her or on any descendant, including
non-Archers,
contact:George Archer,
c/o The Archer Association,
PO Box 6233,
McLean, VA 22106
or email me with your mailing address and a general outline of your
descent from Patrick at:garcher@email.toast.net.

General warning: All of my comments below are based on a 25-year
accumulation of ARCHER surname data with an emphasis on the Patrick
descendants of which I am one. Data is never complete. Conclusions
based on incomplete data are never definitive; there is always room
for error of interpretation and of fact (clerical errors, lies, poor
memory).

Verify the data and conclusions below with your own research,
using original, not published sources. Treat even primary sources
with scepticism. Try to get three pieces of evidence for each fact
you are trying to prove and compare them to ensure they are not all
drawing on the same (flawed) sources. Good luck with your research.
Sometimes that's what is needed.George W. Archer,
former editor, "The Archer Quarterly."]

-=| CONTENTS BY COUNTY|=-

To locate the beginning of a County Section, use a browser Find
key and set it to search an exact word, then type the name of the
county in upper case letters.

Each of the County Sections pertaining to one county contain
information about Archers in other counties as noted below.

NOBLE (Includes Noble Co. Archers who went to Cloud and Riley
Cos, KS.

Includes Catholic Church Parish records from Belmont Co. that
pertained to the Archers in Noble. Until the St. Mary's church in
Fulda, OH, was built in 1853, there was no resident priest in Noble
Co. Records were kept in the parishes whose priests served Noble
Co.)

Pleasant Hill Cemetery in Portage Twp, location: from Findlay, take OH Rt 12 to Liberty School 1.8 mi from city limits; turn
north on Co. Rd 139, go north 6.8 mi and turn east on Co. Rd. 109 for .3 mi to cemetery on south side of road.

p. 98

ARCHER

William A. son of I. & M.A., d. 12 Sep 1856

p. 98-99

(The first three names were together)

George 1825-1894

Rebecca 1820-1890

Joseph 1805-1882

[GWA comment: George Archer (Joseph, Patrick) and wife Rebecca and brother Joseph. Joseph was considerably older than his siblings but
probate records of his estate clearly establish a sibling relationship, despite the age difference.]

Bechtel Cemetery in Allen Twp, from Van Buren Village east on St. Rt. 113 l mi.;
turn south on Twp Rd. 229; cemetery is on left

p. 67

ARCHER

Wilbur DeWitte, son of W.H.& E.G 1895-1901

[GWA comment: Wilbur DeWitte son of William H. Archer and one of his two wives: 1. Ellie G. Howe
md. 2. Etta Hartman. William was born Nov 1864 in Michigan, md. Ellie on 22 Sep 1889 in Hanconck Co, and
md. Etta sometime between 1890 and 1902. There is still no evidence to support his
connection with the Joseph of Patrick line.]

[GWA comment: James (James, Patrick). The fact that James was this far up river from home in Ohio Co., WV (see below) suggesting there
was a lot of movement up and down the Ohio for hunting, fishing and civil affairs like marriages.]

Miscellaneous items from the Commissioner' Books

1802 - July 5

The different listers for the county made their returns, viz:...George Day for Archer (twp).

[GWA comment: According to "History of Carroll and Harrison Counties, Ohio, edited by Judge H.J. Eckley and Judge William T. Perry; Lewis
Publi Co, Chicago, 1921, p. 426: "Archer civil township is among the oldest in Harrison County. It was formed in 1799 as one of the
sub-divisions in Jefferson County. It then included much of the territory of what is now known as Harrison County. It took on its
present boundary March, 1833."

I have no information about how or for whom the township was named. Archer Twp still exists in Harrison Co., today as is due east of
Archer Heights in Brooke Co., WV suggesting a family connection if the same family moved westward along what is today US 22. This route
is a bit too far north to have been a convenient crossing point from Waynesburg, PA to reach Wheeling, WV and Cambridge, OH, that would
have been the probable migration route for two of Patrick's five sons: Joseph, and Jacob.

James of Patrick had already sold his property in Greene Co., PA in 1793. His whereabouts between 1793 and 1798 are not known for sure
but both James, Sr. and Jr. appeared in the Ohio Co., (W) VA 1798 tax rolls and continued to appear until 1807. A search of Ohio Co., VA
land and survey records showed a James Archer (of James, Jr.?) had moved into what was then Ohio Co., (W) VA. and had at least three
pieces of land between Fish Creek (now in Marshall Co. WV) entered in 1802 (Ohio Co., VA Land Book 1785-1813, p. 243; 253) and
another piece of property on both sides of Fishing Creek (now Tyler Co., WV) entered in 1808 (Ohio Co., VA Land Survey 1794-1844, p.
147). When the family left for Monroe Co., (now Noble Co.) OH, James and family probably floated down the Ohio a short ways and debarked
at Clarington the Ohio River terminus of the westward road (Ohio State Route 78) leading to present-day Stock Twp in Noble Co. If they
living on the property in Fishing Creek, farther south, the crossing point probably would have been at Sistersville, (W) VA to connect
with the road (Ohio State Route 800) from Fly, OH to Woodsfield, OH.]

-=| LAWRENCE COUNTY, OHIO |=-

Lawrence Co., OH Deaths

Name

Marital Status

DOD

Age at death

Place of death

Birth Place

Violet

single

1 Mar 1937

57y, 5m, 26d

Kitts Hill, OH

Noble Co, Oh. p. 732

Violet Oneida

single

20 Jan 1919

3y, 21d

Fayette Twp., Lawrence Co, Oh

Ohio p. 733

Wesley - male

widowed

28 Aug 1930

76y, 3m, 2d

Aid Twp, Lawrence Co.

Noble Co., Oh. p. 734

[GWA comment: Wesley is John Wesley Archer (Martin, Michael, Joseph, James, Patrick) and Violet age 57 years, is his single
daughter. John was born in Noble Co., moved to Jackson Co., WV, then to Cabell Co., WV and then to Lawrence Co., OH. Violet Oneida
is not identified but may be a daughter of one of John's sons.]

p. 18- Pennsville Cemetery, Penn Twp., located in Sect. 2 Penn Twp, Morgan Co, Oh. in the village of Pennsville on Twp Rd. 146,
east of Ohio State Route 377. The readings divided the cemetery into "old" (O), "new" (N), and "main" (M). Row
numbers start at the road on the north side of the cemetery; no row numbers were
used for the new section.

[GWA comment: The relationships between Archer and Walraven are a bit hard to deduce from this cemetery plot. What is known:
Elizabeth Walraven md. as his third wife, Anthony Archer b. 1824 on 31 Jan 1864 in Morgan Co, OH. Unknown is if this Elizabeth is
the Elizabeth Archer Walraven, dau of William and R. There could more than one Elizabeth Archers. For instance, if Elizabeth b. c.
1841 was the wife of George Walraven (no proof of this yet available), she probably was still married to him up to his death
in 1871 (unless there is an unfound divorce) making her marriage to Anthony in 1864 unlikely. My records have no Elizabeth, dau of
William and R. in the southeast Ohio counties. Checking on her father, William, who could have a birth date of 1790-1820, there
was insufficient data on wives and children of the many William's of that age to identify her father. Charles B. Archer offers no
clues, but his close proximity to Elizabeth on the stone and in age suggest that he was her brother.]

There is a law suit that contested that James did in fact sell some land that was mis-identified in the deed when James sold it
to Isaac Wilson. James Archer d. Mar 1841 in Guernsey Co. The suit names those who appear to be either James' CHILDREN or his
SIBLINGS and their spouses, one of which is Nancy whose husband is Martin Bates. The others are: George Archer, Henry Archer, Michael
Archer, James Archer and Anthony Jones and Margaret Jones his wife. The land involved was mistakenly described as the NE 1/4 of
the SE 1/4, S. 23, T., 9, R. 9 in the Lewisville (?) Dist, instead of the NE 1/4 of the SE 1/4 of S. 23, T. 9, R. 10.
(Guernsey Co., OH, Court of Common Pleas, Journal M. , Oct Term

The baptisms were recorded by a circuit riding priest who returned to Somerset to record the baptisms performed
somewhere else. But would these baptisms in 1820 have been children or adults? Henry
and Margaret were married in 1816/1826 and 1817, respectively, but before they were
baptized? Unless there is another James and wife, Ann, with children of the same given names, it is possible these
were adult baptisms. Also, I believe that the given for the baptism is a recording date and not the date of actual baptism, as
(see below) George and Rebecca Archer and George Carrol and Anna (Archer) were already in Richland Co., OH for the 1820 census.

There were other Catholic Archers whose children were baptized on the same date who do not seem connected to the immediate family of
James and Ann and were in the Guernsey Co., area. Because Catholic Archers are a rarity in America for this time period and to the
best of my knowledge, Patrick's descendants are the only Catholic Archers, they are probably related, here is an attempt to explore
their relationship to Patrick:

Baptized:

Henry Archer , of James and Ann

Margaret Archer, of James and Ann

Sarah Archer of James and Ann

[GWA comment: Are these the children of the James who died in March 1841? If so they cannot be the same Henry and Margaret who
married in 1816 and 1817, respectively in Guernsey Co., unless they were baptized
as adults.

If they are children who were baptized, they would have married in the 1830's or 1840's and so they could be the heirs of James who
d. in March 1841 but could be James' siblings and not his children.

This still leaves open the ancestry of James. There were three Archers, a James, Henry and George, all living in Spencer Twp.
Guernsey Co. in 1840, where Jacob of Patrick lived, so there is a circumstantial case that this is Jacob's line. Without more
evidence, there is not much more that can be said.]

Ann Archer of Henry and Mary

Joseph Archer of Henry and Mary

[GWA comment: Henry Archer (James?, Jacob?, Patrick?) and Polly Walters. The children would have been ages 1-4, based on Henry and
Mary's marriage date. This Henry, his marriage and baptism dates and mention of a Henry in the James Archer land suit above may
have revealed a missing son for Jacob, or at least another generation of Archers b. c. 1795-1800 living in Guernsey Co.

There is another Henry Archer b. 1806 in PA who md. 1. Susannah Jones 23 Mar 1826 in Guernsey Co. and md. 2. (Mrs.?) Sarah Lewis
15 Oct 1854 in Morgan Co, OH whose children are well documented by censuses as born 10-30 years after Henry and Mary's children and
living in Morgan Co., OH 1840-1860. His ancestry is now open to study. He may well be Jacob's son since the other Henry above has
been identified as the probable son of James.]

Baptized:

____ Archer of George and Rebecca

Michael Archer of George and Rebecca

[GWA comment: Probably Michael of George (Joseph, Patrick) and Rebecca ____. However, the 1820 US census for Monroe Twp, Richland
Co., OH shows a George, probably this George who md. Rebecca, to be already in Richland Co., OH with his family, raising the
question if the baptismal date is the date it was recorded or the actual baptism and the priest simply entered all Archer baptisms
performed within the boundary of his parish. I do not know if both Guernsey and Richland Cos, OH fell within the St. Joseph
parish in 1820. ]

Baptized:

Elizabeth Carrol of George and Ann

Mary Carrol of George and Ann

Margaret Carrol of George and Ann

[GWA comment: These are the children of George Carrol and Anna Archer (Joseph, Patrick) who md. 19 Mar 1812 in Guernsey Co., OH.

Again, I doubt this baptism took place in Guernsey Co., but rather in Richland where George and family were living in Mifflin Twp,
Richland Co. in the 1820 US Census with 3 females under the age of 10.]

Joseph Archer of Michael and Cynthia

Michael Archer of Michael and Cynthia

[GWA comment: Michael Archer and Cynthia Dickerson. His ancestry is not known but by eliminating other Michael's of this age, he
may be a son of Joseph (of Patrick), and he may have opted not to accompany the family to Richland Co. ca. 1818-1820. He is much
older than the others, above (c. 1787 as his wife, Cynthia b. c. 1787; d. 3 Jul 1851, age 64), and their first child, Matilda was
b. 19 Jun 1809. Most of Joseph (of Patrick's) children were born about the time Michael was born.]

The dates are so close together there may be an error in one or both of the years as it appears this may have been a childbirth death where both
mother and daughter died. The mother's death date is from her tombstone in Pisgah Cem, Union Twp, Morgan Co.]

This is the autobiography of Herman Neville Archer b. 8 Jun 1879, Seneca Twp, Noble Co., Ohio, d. 16 Aug 1947, Winter Park, FL
md. Laura Hemmingway. He was the son of John P. Archer and Martha Grandon. John P. was the son of Simon who was the son of James
who was the son of Patrick, the latter two having been described in The Archer Quarterly series
"The Descendants of Patrick Archer." The children of Herman and Laurah (Hemmingway) Archer
were Herman Neville, Jr. and Royal Macklin.

Here are some quotes from the review of the book taken from Book

Review Digest for 1924:

Herman Archer enlisted in the Army when he was only sixteen years old and entered upon a life of adventure. Naturally and frankly
he tells the whole story of it to Mr. Platt, who in turn tells it to us. Young Archer knowing no fear, constantly sought out
adventure, which he found in plenty. He saw service in the Spanish War, in China during the Boxer Rebellion, in the
Philippines when Aguinaldo was captured by Funston, and was with the American filibusterers in Honduras at the time of its
revolution. It is interesting to know that Richard Harding Davis has used this same Archer for the hero of his "Captain Machlin" as
a result of his exploits in the South American revolution.

(Ed. Note: Herman's second son's middle name was "Machlin" probably in reference to the book's character.)

Other reviews:

Bookman June 1924, p. 478-

"Nothing just like it among the current biographies. Though the character himself was not an important figure in this country's
development and military performances, Archer stands for the army which has had a big role. His narrative is frank, naive and
delightful."

Boston Transcript 23 Apr 1924, p.4.

"The career of Mr. Archer of the United States Army makes a fascinating tale of adventure and we are told that it all happens
to be true. The story is set down as it was related to Mr. Platt and it is marked by the easy discursiveness of the natural
storyteller."

Greensboro (N.C.) Daily News 15 Jun 1924

"This book is inconceivably rich, colorful and persuasive. From it one gets the best of the old army, the army that was, the army
of the days prior to 1914. It is a stirring book, a thriller far more effective than the best efforts of the fictioneers. No lovers
of adventure stories can afford to miss it."

New York Tribune 27 Apr 1924, p. 27

"This volume is an interesting recital of adventure, but poorly written. The writer, who apparently has absorbed Mr. Archer's
experiences via shorthand, tried his best to, as it were, 'step into his character,' but failed miserably. Mr. Archer, despite
Mr. Platt's laborious and illogical attempts to delineate character, manages to emerge as a colorful individual."

Springfield Republican 3 Aug 1924

"Archer's story is told with the ease of a book of adventure and it is truly, as the picture of an army man's life, an adventure
story. The realism is carefully surrounded by glamour."

HOHMAN, John Sebasstian (sic) son of John & Margretha Hohman was born in Germany but came to this country at the age of 12 years,
settling in Noble Co. Oh. where he carried on a large business in merchandising and hauling stock. Before railroads were known, he
drove large herds of stock over the Allegheny Mountains to Philadelphia and Baltimore.

During the Civil War, John was a Colonel. At the close of the war, he moved west and settled in Clay Co., Kansas in 1877. Later he
moved to Riley Co., just across the river from Garrison.

John was born 20 San 1825, died 23 Sept 1899. Buried in Hohman Family Cemetery, Riley Co. He married 25 Nov 1844, Matilda
ARCHER, who was born 22 Feb 1826 in Ohio and died 15 Sept 1885.

Buried in the Hohman Cemetery.

Children of Sebastian and Matilda (Archer) Hohman:

John Michael b. 25 Aug 1845; d. 10 May 1909

Maria Barbara b. 15 Jan 1847

Joseph b. 5 Oct 1848

Anna Katharina b. 1850 ; died young

Maria Eva b. 23 Sep 18!;2

John Henry b. 15 Aug 1854

Fernand b. 1.4 May 1856; died young

Regina b. 4 Jul 1857

Maria Anna b. 30 Jan 1859; died young

Francis b. 8 Oct 1861

Charlie b. 13 Sept 1863

Maria Matilda b. Tulda, Oh ; d. 10 June 1933; md. 24 Mar 1887

Michael Manuel Webber, son of Christopher and Margareth (Unker) Webber. Michael Webber was born in Dotseyville, Pa. 2 Oct
1857; died. 17 Apr 1935. He came from Pittsburgh, Pa. to Kansas and worked-on the Hohman farm:. There he met and married Maria. Later
he went to work on the railroad. The name Webber was changed to Weaver when a man with a similar name and Michael's paychecks kept
getting mixed up. Research from Bible records.

DULL, Clifton, son of Joseph. He married: 22 May 1872, Washington, Ks. to Nancy M. Lisherb, 15 Feb 18;4, Brahtford d. 22 Sep 1912,
Clifton. 2. 23 Feb 1917 "Skidoo Dayl@ in'Concordia, to Ada Olive Archer Children of Peter and A(3a;
(sic- Ed. note:I cannot tell if Ada's husband was Peter or Clifton Dull; Peter seems too old to be having children by such a young
wife; this seems to be a transcription error Her husband was probably Clifton, not Peter)

Lyla Izella b. 8 Jan 1918

Hazel Olive b. 10 Aug 1921 md. Mr. Rondle (sources given in text:

Hazel Rondle Fontana and Edna Rogge from Clifton, granddaughter)

Peter was a blacksmith and a farmer. He was Catholic and his education was limited to the third-grade. His first home was a log
cabin near Strawberry, Washington Co., where he settled in 1861.

[GWA Comment: John Sebastian Hohman married Mary Matilda Archer (Michael, James, Patrick). John was in the Civil War but his rank
was exaggerated by the time he got to Kansas. Also he left Noble Co., OH after incurring an enormous debt and in disgrace moved on
to Kansas after selling his half of the business to his son in law, Gustave C. Ehrlerman who married his daughter, Maria Eva
Hohman. John and the family prospered after settling in Riley Co.

They farmed and acquired a large amount of land and left many descendants in the Riley Co., KS area.

[GWA Comment: Mary Archer (Michael, Jacob, Patrick). Note that this is NOT a descendants of James of Patrick, but rather of his
brother Jacob whose descendants were in Morgan Co., OH before Noble Co. was formed in 1851. Some of this line will show up in
Brookfield Twp that after 1851 became Noble Twp of Noble Co.

Mary's sister Sarah (or Margaret) A. md. George's brother, Asberry Jennings. Both couples lived in Noble Co. George was in Sharon
Twp. and Asberry, in Center Twp. There are no known direct intermarriages between Jacob's and James' Archer-surnamed
descendants in the Noble, Morgan, Monroe Cos, OH areas down through 1900.]

p. 75 from a collection of data filed in the Bible of owned by Mrs. Mabel Dovenbarger, Sharon, Oh.

[GWA comment: Willard Vernon (Benjamin Oscar, Thomas, Joseph, Michael, Jacob, Patrick.) He died in Zanesville, OH but is buried
in Olive Cem, Noble Co., OH. Note this is NOT a descendant of James of Patrick. See comments above about Jacob's descendants
being in Morgan Co., OH and Brookfield Twp, Noble Co., OH.]

[GWA comment: Family members say that Georgianna Archer (Edward Purcell, Sebastian, Elijah, Michael, James, Patrick)
md. Forrest Stiers. Perhaps this is a middle name? She was b. 8 Nov 1903 making her only 13 when she married? She died 15 Apr 1966, just
over a month before Forrest died. Whoever wrote the obituary is confused or my family record sources are in error. Check Morgan
Co., OH her marriage license for possible listing of the parents.]

[GWA comment: Jesse (George) but this is probably a Jacob, Patrick line, as there are no other candidates in James' line; however,
naming a child Asbury suggests James' line as the name does not appear anywhere in Jacob's line. Despite the wording, it was Jesse
who served in the Civil War: Co. I 1st OH Heavy Artillery.]

Olive-Green Christian Church Records known as "Turkey" Church - organized in 1871, disbanded Oct 1961 and buildings were sold to
a congregation in Byesvile, Oh and removed from the site. The original records in are in the Library of the First Church of
Christ, Caldwell, Noble Co, OH.

Archer, Naaman, M no. 1 residence Dexter City; when received 1895 May 9 from Pro. ; by whom received M.S. Raiosoberrger; removed to
Caldwell O.; year when first received in the Methodist Episcopal Church, 1895. (p. 61)

Martin L. Culler - deals with John Ernsberger maternal grandfather of Martin L. Culler, whose father was Michael L. and
Mary A. (Ernsberger) Culler both of Maryland. John Ernsberger emigrated to Ohio from Maryland about 1818 and settled in Mifflin
Twp, Richland Co., buying 160 acres of land. His first wife whose maiden name was Mary Smith died when Mrs. Culler was only
12 years old and later married Polly Archer. Sometime during the 1830's they moved to Iowa where he died.

[GWA comment: Polly (Mary) Archer md. John Ernsberger 1827 in Richland Co., OH according to an IGI record. I did not find this
record after searching this marriage in Richland Co., OH.]

(Ed. note: I have included citations on the collateral lines of Copus, Crosser, and Carroll who intermarried with the children of
Joseph Archer of Patrick described in The Archer Quarterly Vol. 2, No. 4. Lewis Lambert was a close family friend of the Archers
and their in-laws. This series will continue in Vol. 6.)

p. 235 Male Residents in April 1839 - Within six years of the day on which the pioneers located here there were over 150
inhabitants including the following named males who in April 1839 were 21 years of age or over: James Archer, Henry Archer, Henry
Copus.

Chapt 38 - Bloom Twp History

"The history of this Township begins in 1831 when the first lands were purchased by Henry Copus and James Archer while yet it
formed a part of the Indian hunting ground. Within two years the pioneers came into the wilderness, cleared a few small tracts in
the forest and made a nucleus round which civilization made a rude beginnings here. The exterior lines were surveyed in 1819
by Alex. and Samuel Holmes and the sections, in 1821, by S. Bourne."

[GWA comment: James Archer who arrived about 1831 from Richland Co., OH is James (Joseph, Patrick).]

p. 109- "J.R. Archer is a native of this county. He taught school for five years and at the end of that time took up the study of
medicine. He was graduated from Starling Medical College at Columbus, Ohio in 1887 and located in the practice at Holgate in
Henry Co. He remained there one year then came to North Baltimore."

[GWA comment: This is an error. He is James Dallas Archer (Joseph, James, Joseph, Patrick). He is described elsewhere in the "History
of Henry and Fulton Counties, Ohio, edited by Lewis Cass Aldric, publ by D. Mason & Co, Syracuse, NY, 1888, p. 165 (Henry County):
"J. Dall Archer was born Oct 30, 1858 in Wood Co., He read medicine with Dr. W.F. Thomas of North Baltimore for three
years when he entered the Starling Medical College. After receiving the first degree, he
went to Dundee, Michigan for practice and remained there until 1885 when he went to Holgate."]

p. 282 Henry Twp History

First purchases of government land in Henry Twp located their cabins in this county are as follows:

James Copus E. SE 1/4 S. 25, 27 Aug 1831

Wesley Copus NW of SE 1/4 of S. 25, 14 Jun 1834

George Carroll SE of SE S. 33, 21 Sep 1832

Lewis S. Lambert NE of SW 1/4 S. 34, 26 Apr 1833

Simon Archer W. SW S. 35, 2 May 1833

Nelson Copus NE, NW 1/4 S. 36, 14 Jun 1834

[GWA comment: Simon Archer (Joseph, Patrick)]

p. 282

Voters 1839- Male Inhabitants over 21 Years of Age in 1839 (selective names)

Daniel Crosser (husband of Nancy of Joseph, Patrick)

John Crosser (husband of Margaret of Joseph, Patrick)

Adam Crosser

George Carroll (George E.? md. Hannah)

Nelson Copus

Lewis Lambert

The first death was that of a child of George Carrel in 1833.

p. 538

Daniel Crosser and Nancy Archer both born in Richland Co., OH the former in 1806, the latter in 1816.

[GWA comment: Nancy Archer (Henry?, Joseph? Patrick?). She was b. c. 1819 making her too young to be Joseph and Margaret Church's child,
since Margaret was b. c. 1760. This leaves Henry as the most eligible father.]

Richland Co., Oh - Deeds Index. and Abstracts (From: LDS microfilm)

(Volume/Page)

[GWA comment: All of these Archers are descendants of Joseph (Patrick). Most of them sold out after Joseph's death in 1822 and
moved to Wood Co., OH or Indiana.]

James Archer

18 Nov 1825 James Archer and Nancy, his wife to George Archer of Richland Co. a part of NW 1/4 Sect. 1, T. 22, R. 17, 100 A. Signed
by James Archer and Nancy (her mark) Archer. Witnesses: W. Gardner and Henry Copus.

11/200

25 Feb 1834 James Archer to James Hartman $400 a part of NW 1/4 of S. 1, T 2 (sic?), R. 17 in Dist of Wooster, Ohio, 60 A.

Signed: James Archer and Nancy (her mark) Archer. Witnesses:

James M. Gilkinson, Jos. Taylor. 11/201 Patent dtd 1 June 1825 from United States to James Archer
deposited in the General Land Office a Certificate of Register of the land in the General Land Office at Wooster, Ohio for NW 1/4,
S.1, T. 22, R. 17. in the Dist. of Wooster, state of Ohio, 158 A. and 58/100.

Eliza Archer married 19 May 1853 to Lecenius Milton Coulter. He was born 19 Mar 1831 son of Meltzer Coulter and Eliza
Azdit. They were married 20 Nov 1823. Meltzer came to Richland Co., Oh with his father when he was 13 years old. Meltzer was the son of
Meltzer Coulter who was the son of Thomas Coulter and Nancy Tannahill.

Entered a farm about 3/4 of a mile of the present site of the village of Perryville being the one on which the Stringer mill now
stands which he cultivated and improved on which he continued to reside as long as he lived. He married : 1. Nancy Tannahil d. 30
Jul 1825; 2. md. Mrs. Martha Rice 1 Nov 1825 ; d. 17 Sep 1875; 3. md. Jane Perry 13 Sep 1836. All buried in Perrysville Cem.

History of Richland County- General Section

p. 642

M.C. Archer, was one of the first trustees of Jackson Twp. in or around Crestline.

Plymouth-Greenlawn Cemetery - NE 1/4, S. 6, SH #98 at TH #11 in Plymouth at the border of Huron Co. Copied July 1980. Each
section of the reading was begun at the north end of the row, taking the rows from east to west.

Row ll, Sect 9

Archer, Harley R. 1900-1974

Eva E. 1915-

p. 260

Crestline Greenlawn Cemetery- NW 1/4 S 14, in Crestline south of the railroad tracks on the east side of State rout #181. Copied
1980 in rows running from north to south beginning on the east side of the cemetery. Row 45

Archer, Mary Ann 1821-1903

Moses C. 1820-1899

Oakland Cemetery- State route 61 on s. side of Shelby, Sharon Twp.

Dates listed are dates of burial except in some cases where information was added from other sources. The numbers given are
the lot numbers.

EWALT

Emma single grave alltmt. sect B East No. 24 1914

Emma R. No. C-108 1950

Gail Archer No. C-108 1958

Kate A. No. C-108 1925

Margaret G. No. C-108 1954

William Kenneth No. LQ-21 1958

William M. No. C-108 1918

The Archer
Association
A Clearing House for the surname ARCHER and variants.

The Archer Association was
formed in 1983 and since then has published
The Archer Quarterly, 200 pages, indexed annually.

The Archer Quarterly is no
longer published, but back issues are available, and the data
therein is available for searching on request

Anyone searching for an Archer family or one of
the many variants can contact:THE ARCHER ASSOCIATIONP. O. BOX 6233
McLean, Virginia 22106